» » Thomas Schumacher - Ficken (The Sound Associates Pressure Cooker Mixes)

Thomas Schumacher - Ficken (The Sound Associates Pressure Cooker Mixes) download mp3 flac


Performer: Thomas Schumacher
Genre: Electronic
Album: Ficken (The Sound Associates Pressure Cooker Mixes)
Released: 1998
Style: Techno
MP3 version ZIP size: 1557 mb
FLAC version RAR size: 1883 mb
WMA version ZIP size: 1268 mb
Rating: 4.2
Votes: 990
Other Formats: MMF AUD DXD MPC VOX MOD MP4


Tracklist

A Ficken (Ficken Pressure Cooker Mix)
B Ficken (Pressure Cooker Dub)

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Bush Music
  • Copyright (c) – Bush Music

Credits

  • Artwork – Michael Hernan
  • Remix, Producer [Additional] – Daz Saund & Ben Tisdall
  • Written-By, Producer, Mixed By – Thomas Schumacher

Notes

℗© Bush Music.

There are also a black vinyl edition and a stickered white label, that have the same catalog numbers.

Daz Saund & Ben Tisdall are also known as Sound Associates.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout (Etchings Side A): BUSH 1059 A
  • Matrix / Runout (Etchings Side B): BUSH 1059 B2

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
Bush 1028 Thomas Schumacher Ficken? ‎(12", Promo) Bush Bush 1028 UK 1996
Bush 1028 Thomas Schumacher Ficken? ‎(12", W/Lbl, Sta) Bush Bush 1028 UK 1996
12 TSX 04 Thomas Schumacher Ficken? ‎(12", Promo) TSX Recordings 12 TSX 04 Germany 2002
12 tsx 04 Thomas Schumacher Ficken? ‎(12") TSX Recordings 12 tsx 04 Germany 2002
Bush 1059 Thomas Schumacher Ficken (The Sound Associates Pressure Cooker Mixes) ‎(12") Bush Bush 1059 UK 1998

Agarus
One of those releases where the music looks better than it sounds, if you follow my lead. The white vinyl is pleasing to the eye, and gives a certain "white label", if not underground feel to it. Unfortunately, the remixes don't do the original much justice, and for the record, I wasn't that crazy about Schumacher's version to begin with. OK, the Ficken Pressure Cooker Mix is the one to avoid. It stretches the original "all night long" vocal through the entire track, and I mean literary the entire track. If I may add, it actually sounds like somebody was throwing up while trying to push those words out of his aching larynx, with little success though. As much as the production may be dope, the vocal ruins every little bit of hope and chance this one could have had... That leaves us with the B side, which does the only thing common sense suggests, ditching the vocal. It's a voxless version of the A side. Not that I dislike it, but in my opnion, it's not a track which can work very well on it own. Personally, due to the many effects, bleeps and blops, I like using it as an additional tool; scratching the hell out of it and so forth. Basically, as far as this release goes, I seriously don't know whether I should frame the vinyl and admire it, or just buy another copy for next to nothing and practice my scratching/cut-up abilitles with it. Nah, joking, if you were all over the original, then go for it, but personally, I could not be bothered to use this one as anything else but a third deck tune on standy by.

Runeshaper
I strongly disagree - I've always loved to use this as a "mash up" with any other techno track, sliding the all night long in and out, left to right with the other track pumping its thing just in the same manner. Sometimes bangin' techno is just the way to go. Then again, I don't like the original one bit.